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and Mrs. Squires. They were married January 9, 1895, at Wah Wah. Owen Grover never owned the springs, his daughter, Mrs. Irene Green says. Mrs. Green says that her uncle, Joseph DeMeulle, owned a small place east of the main farm at Wah Wah and he sold out the same time that her grandmother, Mrs. Squires, sold. Mrs. Green says that in the eighties there was an iron smelter operating a couple of miles from the ranch and her grandfather, Edwin Squires, ran a store at the ranch for a couple of years from about 1884 to 1885 for the benefit of the people who worked at the smelter. The smelter was moved away later but while it was in operation they used the water from the springs. The ore was brought to the smelter from Frisco. Mrs. Green says that none of her people had anything to do with the smelter. She says that her grandparents came from the East to Wah Wah Valley and they came just like the pioneers all came. Mrs. Bell James says a man by the name of DeMeulle owned another big spring near Wah Wah and it was sold along with the Wah Wah Springs to Samuel Newhouse. Both springs were dug out. The water from them was piped down and carried in one pipe to Newhouse. There was lots of water from the two springs, she says. Parley Madsen and Wilford Winch own Wah Wah Springs now. A man by the name of Fred Jensen is the foreman. He farms there and raises stock.
HOW THEY BROUGHT THE DOCTOR There was a time in the history of Snake Valley when if sickness came to any of its inhabitants they were faced with the very difficult problem of getting the much-needed medical assistance. It is said that they have had to send as far away as Payson for a doctor. Many times they would have to go and bring a doctor from Fillmore. When Frisco became a flourishing mining settlement justifying a doctor's residence there, their problems were

and Mrs. Squires. They were married January 9, 1895, at Wah Wah. Owen Grover never owned the springs, his daughter, Mrs. Irene Green says. Mrs. Green says that her uncle, Joseph DeMeulle, owned a small place east of the main farm at Wah Wah and he sold out the same time that her grandmother, Mrs. Squires, sold. Mrs. Green says that in the eighties there was an iron smelter operating a couple of miles from the ranch and her grandfather, Edwin Squires, ran a store at the ranch for a couple of years from about 1884 to 1885 for the benefit of the people who worked at the smelter. The smelter was moved away later but while it was in operation they used the water from the springs. The ore was brought to the smelter from Frisco. Mrs. Green says that none of her people had anything to do with the smelter. She says that her grandparents came from the East to Wah Wah Valley and they came just like the pioneers all came. Mrs. Bell James says a man by the name of DeMeulle owned another big spring near Wah Wah and it was sold along with the Wah Wah Springs to Samuel Newhouse. Both springs were dug out. The water from them was piped down and carried in one pipe to Newhouse. There was lots of water from the two springs, she says. Parley Madsen and Wilford Winch own Wah Wah Springs now. A man by the name of Fred Jensen is the foreman. He farms there and raises stock.
HOW THEY BROUGHT THE DOCTOR There was a time in the history of Snake Valley when if sickness came to any of its inhabitants they were faced with the very difficult problem of getting the much-needed medical assistance. It is said that they have had to send as far away as Payson for a doctor. Many times they would have to go and bring a doctor from Fillmore. When Frisco became a flourishing mining settlement justifying a doctor's residence there, their problems were